How does environment affect the morphology of radio AGN?
Melissa Elizabeth Morris, Eric Wilcots, Eric Hooper, Sebastian Heinz

TL;DR
This study investigates how the environment influences the morphology of radio AGN jets, revealing that bent jets are associated with denser, larger, and more complex galaxy group environments, suggesting a link between environment and jet bending.
Contribution
The paper provides a comprehensive environmental analysis of bent and unbent radio AGN, highlighting the environmental factors affecting jet morphology and challenging simple ram pressure models.
Findings
Bent AGN are more likely in galaxy groups and clusters.
Unbent AGN are more often the brightest in their groups.
Groups with bent AGN have higher galaxy densities.
Abstract
Galaxies hosting Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) with bent radio jets are used as tracers of dense environments, such as galaxy groups and clusters. The assumption behind using these jets is that they are bent under ram pressure from a dense, gaseous medium through which the host galaxy moves. However, there are many AGN in groups and clusters with jets that are not bent, which leads us to ask: why are some AGN jets affected so much by their environment while others are seemingly not? We present the results of an environmental study on a sample of 185 AGN with bent jets and 191 AGN with unbent jets in which we characterize their environments by searching for neighboring galaxies using a Friends-of-Friends algorithm. We find that AGN with bent jets are indeed more likely to reside in groups and clusters, while unbent AGN are more likely to exist in singles or pairs. When considering only…
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